540 ARBORETUM ET FRUTICETUM BRITANNICUM. 
Spec. Char., §&c. Erect. Leaves oblong or oval, clothed with velvety pu. 
bescence beneath. Peduncles elongated, erect. Bracteas obsolete. Tube 
of corolla hairy, gibbous at the base on one side. Limb unequal, deeply 
2-lipped ; the upper lip 4-toothed, and the lower one nearly entire. Berries 
joined in one, which is bi-umbilicate at the top, bluish black in the dried 
state, and about the size of a pea. (Don’s Mill.) Anerect shrub. Island 
of Montreal, in the St. Lawrence, about Montreal ; Lake Winnipeg ; and 
the western parts of the state of New York. Height 3 ft. to4ft. Intro- 
duced in 1823. Flowers yellow , April and May. Fruit bluish black ; ripe 
in August. Horticultural Society’s Garden. 
w 80. L. cwru'tea L. The blue-derried Honeysuckle. 
Identification. Lin. Sp., 349.; Dec. Prod., fps 337.3; Don’s Mill., 3. p. 450. 
Synonymes. _L. villdsa Muni. Cat. p. 22.; Xylésteon villdsum Michx. Fl. Bor. Amer. 1. p. 106.5 
X. Soldnzs Eaton Man. Bot. p. 518.3; L. velutina Dec. Prod. 4. p. 337.3 L. altaica Pall, Fl. Ross. 
t. 37.3 Xylésteum cwrileum canadénse Lam. Dict. 1. p.731.; X. canadénse Du Ham. Arb. 2 
p. 373.; Caprifdlium caerdleum Lam. Fl. Fr., Chamacérasus cerdlea Delarb. It. Au.;_L. py= 
renaica Pall. Fl. Ross. p. 58.; L. Palliseé Led. Fl. Ross. Alt. Ill. t. 13]. Ciliegia alpina, Ztal. 
Engravings. Bot. Mag., t.1965.; Pall. Fl. Ross., t. 37.; Led. Fl. Ross, Alt. Ill. t. 191.3 and our 
s. 1005. and 1006, 
Spec. Char., $c. Erect. Leaves oval-oblong, ciliated, stiffish, densely clothed 
with pubescence while young. Peduncles short, 2-flowered, reflexed in the 
fructiferous state. Bracteas 2, subulate, longer than the 
ovaria. Tube of corolla glabrous, short, gibbous on one 
side at the base ; lobes of limb short, nearly uqual. Ber- 
ries closely joined in one, which is 
bi-umbilicate at the apex. Flowers ff 
greenish yellow, tubular. Berries | 
elliptic or globose, dark blue, and \ 
covered with a kind of bloom. Bark +e 
of young shoots purplish. There 
is no difference between the Ame- @ 
1005. L. crrdlea. rican and European plants of this 
species. (Don's Mill.) An erect 
shrub, Europe, and throughout the woody country of British North 
America, as far as lat. 66°; and of Siberia and Kamtschatka. Height 
3ft. to 5ft. Introduced in 1629. Flowers greenish yellow; March and 
April. Fruit dark blue; ripe in August. ¢ 
D QR 
1006. L. cerilea. 
@ 31. L. orntenra‘tis Lam. The Oriental Honeysuckle. 
Identification. Lam. Dict., 1. p. 731. ; Dec. Prod., 4. p. 337.3; Don’s Mill., 3. p. 450, 
Synonymes. LL. caucasica Pall. Fl. Ross, 1. p.57.; L. cardlea Guild. Itin. 1. p. 423., Chammcérasizs 
orientalis Zaurifdlia Towrn. Cor. p. 42. 
Engraving. Our fg. 1007 from Tournefort’s specimen in the British Museum. 
Spec. Char.,§c. Erect. Leaves on very shor 
petioles, ovate-lanceolate, acute, quite entire, 
smoothish. Peduncles 2-flowered, shorter than 
the leaves. Bracteas 2, setaceous. Berries 
joined in one, didymous and bi-umbilicate at 
the apex, 10-seeded. Leaves stiffish, veiny, 
larger than in L, certlea. Flowers greenish 
yellow. (Don's Mill.) An erect shrub. 
Iberia and Asia Minor, in woods. Height 
3 ft. to 5 ft. Introduced in 1825. Flowers 
greenish yellow; April to June. Berries 
black or dark blue; ripe in September. 1007. L. orientalis, 
a 32. L. re’RIca Bieb. The Georgian Honeysuckle. 
Identification. Bieb. V1. Taur., and Suppl., 395. ; Dee. Prod., 4. p. 337.3; Don’s Mill., 3. p. 459. 
Synonyme. Xylésteon ibéricum Bieb. Con? Pl. Rar. 1. t. 13. ex Su pl., and Lodd. Cat. ed. 1836, 
Engravings. Bieb. Cent. Fl. rar., 1. t. 13., ex Suppl. ; and figs. 108d 10U9. from living specimens. 
Spec. Char., §c. Erect. Leaves petiolate, cordate, roundish, tomentose or 
